Pmw.TextDialog

Name

Pmw.TextDialog() - a dialog displaying a scrolled text

Inherits

Pmw.Dialog

Description

A text dialog is a dialog window which displays a text message to the user along with one or more buttons to press.

Options

Options for this megawidget and its base classes are described below.

activatecommand
If this is callable, it will be called whenever the megawidget is activated by a call to activate(). The default is None.

borderx
Initialisation option. The padding to the left and right of the scrolled text. The default is 10.

bordery
Initialisation option. The padding above and below the scrolled text. The default is 10.

buttonboxpos
Initialisation option. Specifies on which side of the dialog window to place the button box. Must be one of 'n', 's', 'e' or 'w'. The default is 's'.

buttons
This must be a tuple or a list and specifies the names on the buttons in the button box. The default is ('OK',).

command
Specifies a function to call whenever a button in the button box is invoked or the window is deleted by the window manager. The function is called with a single argument, which is the name of the button which was invoked, or None if the window was deleted by the window manager.

If the value of command is not callable, the default behaviour is to deactivate the window if it is active, or withdraw the window if it is not active. If it is deactivated, deactivate() is called with the button name or None as described above. The default is None.

deactivatecommand
If this is callable, it will be called whenever the megawidget is deactivated by a call to deactivate(). The default is None.

defaultbutton
Specifies the default button in the button box. If the <Return> key is hit when the dialog has focus, the default button will be invoked. If defaultbutton is None, there will be no default button and hitting the <Return> key will have no effect. The default is None.

master
This is used by the activate() method to control whether the window is made transient during modal dialogs. See the activate() method. The default is 'parent'.

separatorwidth
Initialisation option. If this is greater than 0, a separator line with the specified width will be created between the button box and the child site, as a component named separator. Since the default border of the button box and child site is raised, this option does not usually need to be set for there to be a visual separation between the button box and child site. The default is 0.

title
This is the title that the window manager displays in the title bar of the window. The default is None.

Components

Components created by this megawidget and its base classes are described below.

buttonbox
This is the button box containing the buttons for the dialog. By default it is created with the options (hull_borderwidth = 1, hull_relief = 'raised'). By default, this component is a Pmw.ButtonBox.

dialogchildsite
This is the child site for the dialog, which may be used to specialise the megawidget by creating other widgets within it. By default it is created with the options (borderwidth = 1, relief = 'raised'). By default, this component is a tkinter.Frame.

hull
This acts as the body for the entire megawidget. Other components are created as children of the hull to further specialise this class. By default, this component is a tkinter.Toplevel.

scrolledtext
The scrolled text to contain the text for the dialog. By default, this component is a Pmw.ScrolledText.

separator
If the separatorwidth initialisation option is non-zero, the separator component is the line dividing the area between the button box and the child site. By default, this component is a tkinter.Frame.

Component aliases

Sub-components of components of this megawidget may be accessed via the following aliases.

label
Alias for scrolledtext_label.
text
Alias for scrolledtext_text.

Methods

Only methods specific to this megawidget are described below. For a description of its inherited methods, see the manual for its base class Pmw.Dialog. In addition, methods from the Pmw.ScrolledText class are forwarded by this megawidget to the scrolledtext component.

bbox(index)
This method is explicitly forwarded to the text component's bbox() method. Without this explicit forwarding, the bbox() method (aliased to grid_bbox()) of the hull would be invoked, which is probably not what the programmer intended.

Example

The image at the top of this manual is a snapshot of the window (or part of the window) produced by the following code.

class Demo:
    def __init__(self, parent):
        # Create the dialog.
        dialog = Pmw.TextDialog(parent, scrolledtext_labelpos = 'n',
                title = 'My TextDialog',
                defaultbutton = 0,
                label_text = 'Lawyer jokes')
        dialog.withdraw()
        dialog.insert('end', jokes)
        dialog.configure(text_state = 'disabled')

        # Create button to launch the dialog.
        w = tkinter.Button(parent, text = 'Show text dialog',
                command = dialog.activate)
        w.pack(padx = 8, pady = 8)

jokes = """
Q: What do you call 5000 dead lawyers at the bottom of the ocean?
A: A good start!

Q: How can you tell when a lawyer is lying?
A: His lips are moving.

Q: Why won't sharks attack lawyers?
A: Professional courtesy.

Q: What do have when a lawyer is buried up to his neck in sand?
A: Not enough sand.

Q: How do you get a lawyer out of a tree?
A: Cut the rope.

Q: What is the definition of a shame (as in "that's a shame")?
A: When a bus load of lawyers goes off a cliff.

Q: What is the definition of a "crying shame"?
A: There was an empty seat.

Q: What do you get when you cross the Godfather with a lawyer?
A: An offer you can't understand.

Q. What do lawyers use as contraceptives?
A. Their personalities.

Q. What's brown and black and looks good on a lawyer?
A. A doberman.

Q. Why are lawyers buried 12 feet underground?
A. Deep down their good.

Q. What's the difference between a catfish and a lawyer?
A. One's a slimy scum-sucking scavenger, the other is just a fish.

"""

Pmw 2.1 - 31 Dec 2020 - Home
Manual page last reviewed: 18 May 2002